The Bronx High School of Science

The Bronx High School of Science
Bronx Science logo

"Every great advance in science has issued from a new audacity of imagination."
John Dewey
Address
75 West 205th Street
Bronx, NY
United States
Coordinates 40°52′42″N 73°53′27″W / 40.87833°N 73.89083°W / 40.87833; -73.89083Coordinates: 40°52′42″N 73°53′27″W / 40.87833°N 73.89083°W / 40.87833; -73.89083
Information
Type Public, Exam school, Selective Magnet School, NYC Specialized High School
Established 1938
Founder Morris Meister
School district DOE Region 10
Oversight NYC Department of Education
Principal Jean M. Donahue
Faculty 139[1]
Grades 912
Enrollment 3,062[2]
Color(s) Green and Gold          
Athletics conference PSAL
Nickname Wolverines
Average SAT scores (2012) 2,010[3]
Newspaper Science Survey
Yearbook Observatory
Affiliations NCSSSMST
Nobel laureates 8
Website bxscience.edu

The Bronx High School of Science (commonly called Bronx Science or Science, and formerly Science High) is a selective public high school in New York City. It is one of nine "specialized" public high schools located in New York City and operated by the New York City Department of Education. Admission to eight of them, including Bronx Science, is based on performance on a standardized examination administered mainly to students in the 8th grade, but also those in the 9th grade.

Founded in 1938 in the borough (an administrative and geographical region) of the Bronx in New York City, Bronx Science is now situated in an educational area known as the Educational Mile in Bedford Park, a neighborhood in the northwest portion of the Bronx. The exam administered to students in the 8th grade was reportedly taken by more than 20,000 students every year as of 1999. Although known for its focus on mathematics and science, Bronx Science also emphasizes the humanities and social sciences and continually attracts students with a wide variety of interests beyond math and science.

Bronx Science is ranked among the top 50 high schools in the country as well as among the top few in New York State. Eight former students have received the Nobel Prize in science, more than any other secondary school in the country.

Name

The Bronx High School of Science is often referred to as Bronx Science and sometimes just Science.[4][5] Students are called Sciencites.[6]

Renown

Bronx Science has received international recognition[lower-alpha 1] as one of the best[lower-alpha 2] high schools in the United States, public or private, regularly ranking in the top 100 in U.S. News and World Report's lists of America's "Gold-Medal" high schools. In 2014, they ranked 34th out of all high schools nationwide and 2nd in New York State;[11] nationwide, Bronx Science ranked 33rd in 2008 and 58th in 2009.[12] It attracts an intellectually gifted blend of culturally, ethnically,[13][14] and economically diverse students from New York City.[15] As of 2012, Bronx Science is ranked as one of the "22 top-performing schools"[16] in America on The Washington Post as well as number 50 out of a list of the best 1,000 high schools in the country on The Daily Beast's "America's Best High Schools"[17] list. In 2014 it was ranked second highest on Cities Journal's list of the "15 Best High Schools in New York",[18] along with Stuyvesant (ranked third)[19] and Brooklyn Tech (ranked eighth).[20]

The average SAT score in 2012 was 2,010 out of 2,400.[3] Almost all Bronx Science graduates continue on to four-year colleges, and it is a "feeder school" with many graduates going on to attend schools in the Ivy League and other institutions each year.[21] Bronx Science has counted 132 finalists in the Intel (formerly Westinghouse) Science Talent Search, the largest number of any high school.[22] Eight graduates have won Nobel Prizes—more than any other secondary education institution in the United States[23]—and six have won Pulitzer Prizes.[24][25] Of the eight Nobel Prizes earned by Bronx Science graduates, seven of them are in physics, which earned Bronx Science a designation by the American Physical Society as an "Historic Physics Site" in 2010.[26][27]

Bronx Science is a member of the National Consortium for Specialized Secondary Schools of Mathematics, Science and Technology (NCSSSMST).[28] Together with Stuyvesant High School and Brooklyn Technical High School, it is one of three original specialized science high schools operated by the New York City Department of Education.[29]

History

Founding

The old Bronx Science logo

Bronx Science was founded in 1938 as a specialized science and math high school for boys, by resolution of the Board of Education of the City of New York, with Morris Meister as the first principal of the school. They were given use of an antiquated Gothic-gargoyled edifice located at Creston Avenue and 184th Street, in the Fordham Road-Grand Concourse area of the Bronx. The building, built in 1918 for Evander Childs High School, had been successively occupied by Walton High School (1930) and by an annex of DeWitt Clinton High School (1935). The initial faculty were composed in part by a contingent from Stuyvesant High School.[30]

Principal Meister put his imprint on the school from its formation, for example selecting as school colors "green to represent chlorophyll and gold the sun, both of which are essential to the chain of life."[31]

Expansion to co-education

The former Gothic building at Creston Avenue and 184th Street that housed the school from its founding in 1938 to 1959

Bronx Science started with about 150 ninth year students and 250 tenth year students, the remaining facilities of the building being used by DeWitt Clinton. As more boys began to attend Science, the Clinton contingent was gradually returned to its own main building. During their joint occupation, which lasted for 2 years until 1940, the two schools had separate teaching staff and classes, but the same supervision and administration.

In 1946, as a result of the efforts of Meister, the faculty, and the Parents Association, the school became co-ed, giving girls of New York equal opportunity to pursue a quality education in a specialized high school, previously denied to them. This expansion to co-education preceded its rivals Stuyvesant (1969) and Brooklyn Tech (1970) by more than two decades.

In 1958, after 20 years as principal of the school, Morris Meister resigned to become the first president of the newly organized Bronx Community College. Mr. Meister personally selected a teacher, Alexander Taffel, to succeed him as principal.

Move to modern facilities

Dedication of the new building in 1957

From the beginning, the Parents Association and Principal Morris Meister campaigned for a new building. After twenty years, but under Principal Taffel, plans were finally completed for a new $8 million building, designed by the architectural firm of Emery Roth and Sons.[32] The new building would be on 205th Street near Bedford Park Boulevard, in a predominantly institutional area, between DeWitt Clinton High School and its large football field on one side, and Harris Field and Hunter College (now Lehman College) on the other. On March 3, 1959, students and faculty occupied the new building for the first time, solving the problem of how to move the books from the old library to the new in typical Bronx Science manner: on Friday afternoon each student took home five library books from the old building, and on Monday returned them to the new one.

They entered a school equipped with modern classrooms, laboratories, and technical studio areas. The main lobby entrance featured a 63-foot (19 m), Venetian glass mosaic mural overhead, depicting major figures from the history of science such as Marie Curie and Charles Darwin under the protective hands of a God-like figure representing knowledge, with this quote from John Dewey: "Every great advance in science has issued from a new audacity of imagination." The mural is an original work by Frank J. Reilly entitled Humanities Protecting Biology, Physics, Chemistry. Legions of students over the years, bemoaning the lack of swimming facilities, have sarcastically referred to the mural as "the Science swimming pool", perpetuating the idea – perhaps apocryphal – that a choice was made to fund a mural rather than a pool in the new building.

The move was not without incident. In the first spring of the move, rumors swept the school that various Bronx youth street gangs were coming to the school, and that the Fordham Baldies would shave the hair of Science students. This never happened. Another incident did happen that spring: The first time Science girls appeared on the outdoor physical education field in gym clothes, some students from the neighboring, all-male DeWitt Clinton High School charged the separation fence between their field and the Science field. The fence held, but the female students exercised indoors for the remainder of that year.

When Bronx Science celebrated its silver anniversary in June 1963, President John F. Kennedy hailed it as "a significant and pathfinding example of a special program devoted to the development of the student gifted in science and mathematics." The President had recently selected one of its graduates, Harold Brown, of the class of 1943, for the position of Director of Defense Research and Engineering; he would later serve as Secretary of Defense under President Jimmy Carter.

Recent administration

When Alexander Taffel retired as principal in 1978, the chairman of the Biological Science Department, Milton Kopelman, became Principal.[33] He remained so for over ten years. Upon Principal Kopelman's retirement in 1990, long-time faculty member and Biology Assistant Principal Vincent Galasso became principal. He was followed by Physical Science Department Assistant Principal Stanley Blumenstein, a 1963 graduate of Bronx Science.

In 2000, William Stark, an assistant principal of the Social Studies Department, was appointed acting principal. He was expected to move up to the principal's office, when Chancellor Harold O. Levy decided to try to find a Nobel laureate to become principal.[34] However, when that effort failed, Stark was still not offered the job as principal. Stark said that if he wasn't officially offered the job by a certain date, he would take another position being offered to him elsewhere. When the deadline came and went, Stark accepted a job as principal of Manhasset High School. Many faculty and parents were upset that Stark was not appointed in a timely way and thus had left the school; Vincent Galasso agreed to an interim appointment for one term in 2001.[34]

After Levy's unsuccessful attempt to appoint a Nobel laureate, Valerie J. Reidy, Assistant Principal of the Biology Department, was appointed principal in September 2001; she was the first female principal in the school's history. Reidy has been a controversial figure, and several teachers left the school in response to her becoming principal. Some teachers have openly criticized her to newspapers and some students staged protests in 2005 and 2008.[34][35][36] There was also a substantial exodus of social studies teachers at the end of the 2010–2011 term, reportedly due to problems with the administration.[37] Reidy announced her resignation in June 2013.

In September 2013, Jean Donahue was named interim principal of the school. Donahue is an alumna of the school (Class of 1977), the parent of an alumna, and a long time faculty member at the school. Donahue has since been instated as the principal.

Enrollment

Entrance examination

Bronx Science has a student body of about 3,000 students. Admission is based exclusively on an entrance examination, known as the Specialized High Schools Admissions Test (SHSAT), open to all eighth and ninth grade New York City students. The test covers math (word problems and computation) and verbal (reading comprehension, logical reasoning, unscrambling paragraphs) skills. In 1999, there were 20,000 students taking the entrance exam,[21] increasing to approximately 30,000 students in 2011.[38] During the 2011 round of tests, 19,587 students listed Bronx Science as a choice on their application, and about 1,044 applicants were offered spots at the school, making for an acceptance rate of 5.3%.[38]

Student body

Although the student body comprises almost every ethnic group in New York City, about 63% of Bronx Science's student population is Asian as of 2012. White, Black, and Hispanic students represent 23.51%, 3.33%, and 6.89% of the school's student population respectively.[39] The ratio of female to male students, as of 2012, is approximately one female for every male.[lower-alpha 3]

Facilities and resources

Holocaust Museum and Studies Center

The Stuart S. Elenko Holocaust Museum and Studies Center, before the 2013 renovation and rebuilding.

In 1978, Stuart S. Elenko, a Social Studies faculty member, founded a Holocaust Museum and Studies Center at Bronx Science, funded by grants, donations, and the New York City Council, in order to teach students about tolerance.[47] The museum, located in the school's library,[47] was one of the first of its kind in the United States, and houses a collection of rare documents, photographs, artifacts, and other material from the Nazi era; the Studies Center sponsors speakers and puts together and distributes educational materials about the Holocaust. The museum has had over 60,000 visitors. In 2004 an anonymous alumnus of the school made a very large donation to the museum. In 2006, the museum moved out of its original home into a larger space, although plans were made for the museum to be renovated.[47]

In April 2013, after more than a decade, Bronx Science completed the expensive job of rebuilding the newly redesigned museum which now sits in the basement of the school. Costing over $1 million thanks to several grants and numerous donations from alumni, including $150,000 from the City Council. Over $500,000 of those expenses directed to the museum's construction. The museum is one of the rarest of its kind, being located in an American public high school.[47][48][49] Home to over 1,000 collected artifacts, the museum is housed in a 1,000-square-foot (93 m2) room, which sports an aggregation of artifacts tucked in pull-out drawers and positioned beneath glass displays, along with their respective captions.[47][48][49] Bronx Science offers a Holocaust Leadership Class (offered to sophomores and upperclassmen), which allows the students in this class to serve as the tour guides of the Holocaust Museum & Studies Center.[50]

Academics

Bronx Science is the only NYC Specialized High School with a campus.
A hallway on the first floor of Bronx Science
A math and computer programming class at Science in 1960, with an IBM 650 op code chart, upper right. Science was one of the first high schools to teach computers. The school had a keypunch machine and students ran their programs at the Watson lab at Columbia University. Science obtained its own computer, an IBM 1620, a year and a half later.

Bronx Science students take a college preparatory curriculum that includes four years of lab science, math, English, social studies, two or three years of foreign language and a year of fine arts, with required courses and a wide selection of electives, including advanced placement (AP) classes, which allow students to place out of introductory college science courses. Over 160 distinct courses are offered.[51][52] Students have an opportunity to do independent research, and many compete in the annual Intel Science Talent Search (formerly sponsored by Westinghouse).

In the biological sciences, the students have the additional option of taking a special "double honors" biology course, which features extra laboratory exposure. Science electives include microbiology, physiology, forensic science, human genetics, evolution, astronomy, organic chemistry, electronics and others.[52] The mathematics department offers the standard AP courses in AB/BC calculus and statistics, courses in multivariable calculus and computer science, including AP Computer Science A. A course in linear algebra and differential equations was offered for the first time in fall 2007.[52] Students take four years of English, with electives including honors creative writing, exploring science fiction, journalism workshop, and AP English.[52] Four years of social studies or history classes are required, and include US and world history, economics – with electives in psychology, law, finance, and global studies, among others.[52] Three years of languages are required. Bronx Science offers French, Spanish, Latin, Italian, Modern Greek, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean.[52] At one time Hebrew, Russian, and German were also offered.

Students in their sophomore year are required to take either Applied Science or a class to satisfy the Sophomore Research Requirement. Classes that satisfy the Sophomore Research Requirement include Introduction to Engineering, Social Science Research, Biology/Physical Science Research, and Math Research.[52] Students have the option of continuing their research in their junior and senior years, which gives them the opportunity to work with mentors and submit their final research paper to prestigious competitions such as the Intel Science Talent Search.[52] Students must also obtain credits from two terms of a class in the fine arts or the equivalent. The fine arts requirement is usually satisfied during Bronx Science's Summer Program which offers Drama, Music, and Art.[52] Students usually "double up" on two of these courses to satisfy the fine arts requirement for once and all during the time period of one summer. However, it is possible to satisfy the fine arts requirement by taking a music elective such as Jazz Band or an arts elective such as AP Studio Art during the regular school year.[52]

Health and Physical Education courses are also required, with activities including step aerobics, weight training, basketball, skating, team handball, fitness, and yoga.[52]

Representative electives

Representative electives include:[52]

Advanced Placement courses

Bronx Science offers all of the AP courses, except for AP German Language and Culture. The courses include:[52]

Research opportunities

Along with a rigorous academic foundation and an array of extracurricular choices, students are provided with original research opportunities in the biological, physical, and social sciences, and programs that hone students' investigative skills and prepare them for academic competitions. Interested students may apply for research programs in their freshman year and begin a three-year sequence of voluntary work on their projects in their sophomore year. During this time, students collaborate with scientists at local laboratories to develop and complete an independent research project, usually concentrated during two summers. The program culminates in the writing of a scientific paper in the senior year, which is submitted to various competitions, such as the Intel Science Talent Search. Since the inception of this prestigious national competition in 1942, Bronx Science has accumulated the highest number of finalists: 132.[22]

School publications

Bronx Science students working on the publication of the Science Survey in the newspaper publication room

There are several school publications, some produced by students, others produced by individual departments.

Science Survey[53] is Bronx Science's entirely student-run newspaper. Students manage everything: reporting, layout, design, editing, and final production, under the supervision of the journalism teacher. The paper runs on funds from its advertisers, with no fiscal school support. The paper is distributed on average 7 times per year at no charge. Science Survey has been the name of the Bronx Science student newspaper since the founding of the school in 1938.

Dynamo[54] is the literary magazine sponsored by the English Department, consisting of original poems and stories submitted by students from all grades. The Observatory is Bronx Science's prize-winning yearbook. The yearbook office has a custom-built web server to manage its production, powered by MediaWiki and Coppermine software.

The Biology Department sponsors two publications. BioNIC[55] (the Biology News and Information Center) is an annual web publication featuring biology-related events at Bronx Science, student-written articles, opportunities, and links to helpful and interactive pages. Biology Journal, a joint venture between students and faculty, documents advances in the field within the school and in the outside world. Each themed issue contains interviews, commentaries, artwork, featured student research papers, and abstracts from every student biology research project that year.

Other department-produced publications include the annual Math Bulletin,[56] consisting of student term papers, original student mathematics research, and topics in mathematics; Exposition, an annual production of the Social Studies Department; and Reactions,[57] written by Physical Science students.

BS was the name for the school's underground newspaper in the 90's. The paper may not be currently active. It was entirely student-run and financed by the writers, through candy sales to the student body. The paper included only student-written content covering local politics, poetry, fiction, non-fiction and art. One article covered the lax grading of one teacher, demonstrating several purposefully ridiculous homework responses which the teacher 'checked' as being acceptable without reading.

Student life

Events

The Bronx High School of Science Concert Band playing during the Winter Concert

An events calendar is maintained on the school's website.[58]

Extracurricular activities

Sports

Boys Outdoor Cross Country team competing at nearby Van Cortlandt Park

The school boasts both boys' and girls' teams for basketball, bowling, cross country, fencing, golf, gymnastics, handball, track, soccer, swimming, tennis, and volleyball. The baseball, basketball, softball, and volleyball teams compete on both the varsity and junior varsity levels. The cricket team is co-ed. Bronx Science also has a girls varsity flag football team, a boys varsity wrestling team, a girls varsity lacrosse team, and a developmental boys varsity lacrosse team. In the 2009 to 2010 school year, Bronx Science's boys won the "Triple Crown": the cross country, indoor track, and outdoor track were ranked best in the Bronx all in one year. In 2012 to 2013 school year the Girls Soccer team defeated Beacon High School winning the PSAL city championship.

Academic teams

  • Winners, 2010 New York City Regional Finalists
  • Winners, 2009 Connecticut Regional- Winner; Winners, 2009 New York City Regional Finalists; Winners, 2009 New York City Regional – Rockwell Automation and Innovation in Control award
  • Winners, 2007 New York City Regional Chairman's Award; Winners, 2007 New Jersey Regional Finalists
  • Winners, 2006 New York City Engineering Inspiration Award[66][67]
  • Winners, 2005 New York City Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield, and Byers Entrepreneurship Award[66][67]
  • Winners, 2004 New York City Delphi Driving Tomorrow Award[66][67]
  • Winners, 2010 New York City Regional – Winner; Winners, 2010 New York City Regional – Engineering Inspiration Award; Winners, 2010 New Jersey Regional – Imagery Award
  • Winners, 2009 Connecticut Regional – Best Website
  • Winners, 2008 New York City Regional – Website Excellence Award
  • Winners, 2007 New York City Regional – Rookie All-Star Award

Clubs and teams

Bronx Science auditorium before renovation
  • American Cancer Society, Bronx Science Chapter
  • Amnesty International
  • ARISTA – The National Honor Society
  • ASPIRA
  • Astronomy Club
  • Badminton Club
  • BOSS/WIS (Black Organization for Student Strength/West Indian Society)
  • Cancer Society
  • Chess Club
  • DIY Club
  • Dynamo Literary Magazine
  • Edible Arts Club
  • Exposition History magazine
  • Fencing Club
  • Gay-Straight Alliance
  • Girls Learn International
  • Hellenic Cultural Society
  • History Club
  • Improvisation Club
  • Italian Club
  • Japanese Animation Club
  • Japanese Culture Club
  • Judaic Cultural Society
  • Kendo Club
  • Key Club
  • Latin Club
  • League for Environmental and Animal Protection (LEAP) Club
  • Lunar New Year Productions
  • Model UN Club
  • Media Appreciation Club
  • Muslim Students' Association[69]
  • Nasha of Culture
  • Origami Club
  • Painting Club
  • Philosophy Club
  • Photography Club
  • Random Acts of Kindness
  • Red Cross Club
  • Science Fiction Fantasy
  • Seekers Christian Club
  • SING!, student produced musical
  • The Starving Artists' Society
  • The Stock Market Club
  • Table Games Club
  • Ultimate Frisbee
  • Bronx Science UNICEF
  • UNIDAD Culture and Dance
  • Urban Dance Club
  • Wolverine TV
  • Yoga Club

Faculty

The Bronx Science faculty includes educators with advanced degrees, including the PhD, in their field, and many have taught at universities. Unlike most New York City public schools, teachers are not hired according to seniority. Instead, teachers are interviewed and reviewed by a committee of current teachers from the department. Some teachers are also alumni of the school.

Many teachers also play an active role in the advancement of the school's vision. For example, Fanny K. Ennever, PhD, a former teacher in the Physical Science Department and adjunct assistant professor at Columbia University,[70] was responsible for securing a $27,500 grant in both 2004 and 2005 for developing and modifying the Bronx Science chemistry laboratory curriculum, in order to make sessions less "cookbook" and more inquiry-based.[71]

Every year, the senior members of ARISTA National Honor Society vote for the Honored Teacher Award. Winners of the award include Patricia Nunez (Foreign Language, Spanish), Gregory Greene (Mathematics), James Perna (Mathematics), Pat Drury (Physical Education), John Reutershan (Mathematics), Alison Wheeler (Biology), Nina Wohl (Social Studies), Mrs. Ramos (Chemistry), Louis DiIulio (Social Studies) Dermot Hannon (English), Sophia Sapozhnikov (English), Todd Davis (Social Studies) and Nicholas McConnell (English).

Transportation

The larger majority of students who attend the school travel from other boroughs, mainly Queens and Manhattan. Most students take paid and private school bus service or public transportation in New York City.[15] In public transportation, the school can be reached by the New York City Subway from the Bedford Park Boulevard (B D trains) or Lehman College (4 train) stations, as well as by New York City Bus's Bx10, Bx22, Bx26, Bx28.

Students residing a certain distance from the school are provided full-fare or half-fare student MetroCards (cards used to access public transportation in New York City) depending on the distance at which the student resides from the school, as part of a collaborative effort between the New York City Department of Education and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority which controls public transportation in New York City, for students who attend NYC public schools.[72] Paid private school bus service for Bronx Science only serves students who reside in the boroughs of Queens (Queens county of New York State) and Manhattan (New York county). The larger majority of students, however, reside in Queens, which is non-contiguous to and at a distance from the school's location in the Bronx. Private school bus service is thought to contribute to the school's popularity with students residing in Queens, allowing the school to serve students who have scored higher on the admission test, and generally increasing the quality of students who attend the school.

Notable alumni

Nobel Prize winners

The Bronx High School of Science counts eight Nobel Prize winners among its graduates, seven in physics and one in chemistry:[23]

No other secondary school in the United States has as many alumni who have won Nobel Prizes.[23][26] If Bronx Science were a country, it would be tied at 14th with Norway for number of Nobel laureates (as of July 2013).[23][78] Were Bronx Science a university, it would be tied for 58th place for number of Nobel laureates, matching University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and University of Maryland.

Pulitzer Prize winners

Bronx Science also has six Pulitzer Prize-winning graduates; a seventh is the Editor of a newspaper that was awarded:

Additional alumni honors

Six alumni have won the National Medal of Science, the nation's highest scientific honor bestowed by the U.S. President and thus far awarded to 425 scientists and engineers. Bronx Science also counts among its graduates 29 current members of the United States National Academy of Sciences (NAS), an honor attained by only about 2,000 American scientists. There are 22 Bronx Science graduates who are current members of the United States National Academy of Engineering (NAE), ten are current members of the Institute of Medicine (IOM), and at least one is a current member of the Royal Society of Canada. Other award-winning alumni include journalist Mark Boal, who was honored with the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for The Hurt Locker (2009).

Notes

  1. Examples include:
    • The Minister for Education of Singapore citing the school as a paradigm for Singapore's own schools;[7]
    • the use of the Bronx Science curriculum as a model for the Manila Science High School in the Philippines;[8]
    • and plans for schools in the former Soviet Union, Turkey, Japan, Korea, and China to be developed according to the Bronx Science curriculum.[9]
  2. See, for example, this[10]
  3. According to Bronx Science FAQ, "The ratio of boys to girls at Science ranges from 51:49 to 49:51, averaging 50:50."[40]

References

  1. "2004–2005 ANNUAL SCHOOL REPORT" (PDF). Bronx High School of Science. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-09-26. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
  2. "About Us: Statistics" (PDF). Bronx High School of Science. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
  3. 1 2 "NewsWeek's Top 20 high schools: Northeast '". The Daily Beast. May 20, 2012. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  4. Sederer, Lloyd I. (October 22, 2012). "A Safe Place to Be Smart: The Bronx High School of Science". Huffington Post.
  5. "Eighteenth Commencement Exercises" (PDF). The Bronx High School of Science. January 30, 1950. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  6. "Mission". The Bronx High School of Science. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  7. "SPEECH BY MR THARMAN SHANMUGARATNAM, MINISTER FOR EDUCATION & SECOND MINISTER FOR FINANCE, AT THE OFFICIAL OPENING OF NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SINGAPORE HIGH SCHOOL OF MATHEMATICS AND SCIENCE (NUS HIGH SCHOOL)". Singapore Ministry of Education. April 23, 2007. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved August 12, 2007.
  8. "History of the Philippines' First Science High School". 40th Commencement Exercises Yearbook, Manila Science High School. 2003. Archived from the original on May 25, 2007. Retrieved August 12, 2007.
  9. "About Bronx Science – Bronx High School of Science Alumni Association". Retrieved March 11, 2011.
  10. "Brueck Promoted to UNM Distinguished Professor". University of New Mexico. October 26, 2006. Archived from the original on July 18, 2007. Retrieved August 12, 2007.
  11. "The Bronx High School of Science in BRONX, NY". U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved 24 April 2014.
  12. "Gold Medal Schools". U.S. News and World Report. December 14, 2008. Archived from the original on December 10, 2008. Retrieved January 11, 2009.
  13. Herman Badillo (2006). One Nation, One Standard: An Ex-Liberal on How Hispanics Can Succeed Just Like Other Immigrant Groups. Sentinel. p. 28.
  14. "By the Numbers: Public, Private and Religious High Schools" (PDF). The Blackboard Awards. 2006. Retrieved August 12, 2007.
  15. 1 2 Joseph Berger, "How Do You Get To Bronx Science? The Yellow Bus; A Private Transportation Service Fosters the Queens Connection". The New York Times, January 14, 2003.
  16. Winston, Kimberley (May 18, 2012). "Education". The Washington Post.
  17. Archived May 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  18. "15 Best High Schools In New York: #2 The Bronx High School of Science". Cities Journal. 2014. Retrieved 18 May 2014.
  19. "15 Best High Schools In New York: #3 Stuyvesant". Cities Journal. 2014. Retrieved 18 May 2014.
  20. "15 Best High Schools In New York: #8 Brooklyn Technical High School". Cities Journal. 2014. Retrieved 18 May 2014.
  21. 1 2 Heather Mac Donald (Spring 1999). "How Gotham's Elite High Schools Escaped the Leveller's Ax". City Journal. Retrieved August 12, 2007.
  22. 1 2
  23. 1 2 3 4 5 Newman, Andy (October 10, 2012). "Another Nobel for Bronx Science, This One in Chemistry". The New York Times. Retrieved October 11, 2012.
  24. 1 2 "A Nobel Laureate Returns Home to Bronx Science", The New York Times, October 15, 2010. Retrieved October 15, 2010.
  25. "High School, Summer School Gain Historic Site Designation". APS News. American Physical Society. January 2011. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
  26. "NCSSSMST Institutional Members". Archived from the original on August 10, 2009. Retrieved August 14, 2007.
  27. Kahlenberg, Richard D. (June 22, 2014). "Elite, Separate, Unequal: New York City's Top Public Schools Need Diversity". The New York Times. Retrieved July 20, 2014.
  28. "Timeline – click on 1930s – 1937/1938". The Campaign for Stuyvesant – History. OurStrongBand.org. Archived from the original on February 21, 2009. Retrieved April 19, 2009.
  29. "The Bronx High School of Science". Bxscience.edu. 1999-12-31. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
  30. "About the architect". Nyc-architecture.com. Retrieved June 4, 2012.
  31. "Alexander Taffel Dies at 86; Championed Bronx Science", The New York Times, January 25, 1997. Retrieved April 11, 2008.
  32. 1 2 3 "Teacher flight feared at elite high school". Columbia University Journalism School. March 5, 2001. Archived from the original on June 26, 2007. Retrieved October 22, 2006.
  33. "Showdown At Bronx Science". The New York Sun. May 27, 2005. Retrieved October 31, 2006.
  34. "Students Stage Walkout At Bronx Science". The Sun. January 16, 2008. Retrieved February 5, 2008.
  35. "Bronx Science Sees Exodus of Social Studies Teachers," Anna Phillips, The New York Times, September 15, 2011
  36. 1 2 "Specialized High Schools Student Handbook 2011–2012" (PDF). NYC Department of Education. Retrieved March 1, 2012.
  37. "NYC DOE School Portal: Bronx High School of Science(X445): Register, Statistics, About Us". January 22, 2008. Archived from the original on 2008-07-02. Retrieved April 1, 2008.
  38. "The Bronx High School of Science". Bxscience.edu. 1999-12-31. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
  39. Samuel G. Freedman. "How Does Their Garden Grow? Very Well, Say Junior Farmers at Bronx Science" (PDF). Slowfoodla.com. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
  40. "Sunlight as Energy". New York Power Authority. Retrieved December 2, 2006.
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